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2,234 results for "El Niño" — page 11 of 112
M_1_03 — Iron Pillar of Delhi — Unexplained Corrosion Resistance
The Iron Pillar of Delhi is a 7.21-meter, 6.5-tonne wrought iron column standing in the Qutb Minar complex in Mehrauli, New Delhi, dating to approximately 402 CE during the Gupta dynasty — most likely commissioned by Cha
A_1_19 — Enūma Anu Enlil: Mesopotamian Celestial Omen Compendium
Enūma Anu Enlil ("When Anu and Enlil…" — named after its incipit) is the most important Mesopotamian celestial omen series — a massive cuneiform compendium of approximately 68–70 tablets containing some 7,000 omens corre
A_1_22 — Proto-Writing Development and Precursors to Cuneiform
The transition from pre-literate record-keeping to cuneiform script spanned approximately 5,000 years, from small geometric clay tokens used for commodity tracking in the Neolithic (c. 8000 BCE) through the emergence of
A_2_17 — Chaldean Oracles: Theurgic Fire and the Divine Intellect
The Chaldean Oracles (Logia tōn Chaldaiōn) are a collection of hexameter verses composed in the late 2nd century CE — traditionally attributed to Julian the Chaldean and/or his son Julian the Theurgist during the reign o
A_2_10 — Gospel of Thomas: Sayings Gospel and Hidden Wisdom
The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of 114 sayings (logia) attributed to "the living Jesus," preserved in a complete Coptic translation within the Nag Hammadi library (Codex II, discovered 1945 in Upper Egypt) and in fr
A_4_06 — Quranic Cosmology, Jinn, and Islamic Angelology
The Quran — Islam's primary sacred text (610–632 CE) — presents a rich cosmological framework that includes seven heavens and seven earths, a Throne of God (al-Arsh) upon the cosmic waters, a fully populated invisible re
A_3_02 — The Egyptian Pyramid Texts: Oldest Religious Literature on Earth
The Pyramid Texts are the oldest substantial body of Egyptian funerary literature ever discovered and among the oldest substantial religious corpora of any civilization — inscribed on the interior walls of Old Kingdom py
U_1_16 — Gamelan: Indonesian Bronze Orchestra Tradition
Gamelan — from the Javanese word gamel ("to hammer") — is the collective term for the bronze percussion orchestra traditions of Java, Bali, and neighboring Indonesian islands, representing one of the world's most acousti
U_1_08 — Carnival, Festival, and Celebration
Carnival, festivals, and celebrations — periodic communal events characterized by heightened sensory experience, relaxation or inversion of social norms, shared feasting, music, costume, and collective joy — are universa
U_1_20 — Electronic & Experimental Music: Synthesis, Sampling & Algorithmic Composition
Electronic and experimental music — from Pierre Schaeffer's musique concrète (1948) to contemporary algorithmic composition — represents one of the most transformative developments in the history of sound, severing the a
U_3_03 — Ancient Jewelry, Adornment & Shell Bead Trade
Personal adornment is among the oldest archaeological markers of symbolic behavior, with the earliest known ornaments — perforated Nassarius shell beads from Blombos Cave, South Africa, and sites in North Africa and the
U_5_01 — Myth in Modern Media: Star Wars, Tolkien & Marvel
Ancient mythological structures persist as the deep architecture of modern popular culture, demonstrating either the psychological universality of certain narrative patterns or the conscious adoption of mythological temp
U_5_04 — Comics, Graphic Novels, and Sequential Art
Sequential art — narrative through sequences of images, often combined with text — is one of humanity's oldest communication forms. Precursors: Egyptian tomb paintings with sequential narrative panels; Trajan's Column (R
X_2_13 — Pain Science: Nociception, Perception, and the Biopsychosocial Model
Pain is one of the most universal human experiences — and one of the most complex phenomena in medicine and neuroscience. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as "an unpleasant sensory
X_5_21 — Regenerative Medicine & Stem Cell Science
Regenerative medicine aims to repair, replace, or regenerate damaged human cells, tissues, and organs through stem cell therapies, tissue engineering, gene therapy, and biomaterial scaffolds. The field was transformed by
X_5_22 — Paracelsus & the Birth of Chemical Medicine
Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim (1493–1541), self-named Paracelsus, was a Swiss-German physician-alchemist who revolutionized European medicine by rejecting Galenic humoral theory and introducing
X_5_26 — Psychedelic Medicine: The Johns Hopkins Center and the Therapeutic Renaissance
The psychedelic therapy renaissance — centered at the Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research (established 2019, originally launched as a research program in 2000) — represents one of the most sig
X_5_27 — Stem Cell Medicine and Regenerative Therapy
Stem cell medicine — the therapeutic use of cells capable of self-renewal and differentiation into specialized cell types — has progressed from a theoretical concept to clinical reality over six decades. James Till and E
X_4_02 — Medical Ethics: Tuskegee, Helsinki, Informed Consent
The history of medical ethics is inseparable from the history of medical abuse — each major ethical framework emerged in direct response to documented exploitation. The Nuremberg Code (1947) establishing voluntary inform
X_3_11 — Battlefield Medicine: Surgical Innovation Under Fire
Battlefield medicine — the practice of treating wounded soldiers under active combat conditions — has been one of the most powerful and paradoxical engines of medical innovation in human history. The pressure of mass cas
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